C
codefro
Guest
Hello all-
I wanted to get some dialogue going here. I have been thinking a lot lately about the Church’s historical holding to the concept of Limbo for the Unbaptized Infants. Now, if I have this right, the idea is that infants are born with the stain of original sin which would keep them from seeing the Beatific Vision should they die and be received into Heaven. So because they were not baptized, and the stain of Original Sin was not removed and babies cannot desire their own baptism, they cannot experience Heaven. Yet, because of their innocence and lack of committed sin, they experience Limbo where a natural happiness can be experienced, but not the euphoria of the Beatific Vision.
In Pope Emeritus Benedict XVI’s time as Prefect and Pope, he let it be known that his personal opinion is that the “theory” of Limbo needs to be thrown out due to “recent understandings of God’s Love and Salvation”. Yet, the need for a concept like Limbo is still there, otherwise you throw out the idea of Original Sin. I read the letter issued by the Theological Commission at the Vatican that Pope Benedict endorsed. Yet, the letter doesn’t throw out Limbo, it just tries to find a way to say that one can hope children are saved if they die without Baptism, yet Limbo remains a valid theory. It also says that Catholics MUST baptize their children as soon as possible (in a sort of way I interpret as either a “just in case” policy or “we may be wrong and Limbo may exist”?). So even the Theological Commission’s letter doesn’t really settle the matter.
I have tried to find any essays or books on this subject in today’s Church thinking, yet not much is out there. Ralph Martin covers it slightly in “Will Many Be Saved?”. Does anybody have any thoughts or recommendations for me to look? This is something I am really fascinated by and would like to read up a lot more on it.
I wanted to get some dialogue going here. I have been thinking a lot lately about the Church’s historical holding to the concept of Limbo for the Unbaptized Infants. Now, if I have this right, the idea is that infants are born with the stain of original sin which would keep them from seeing the Beatific Vision should they die and be received into Heaven. So because they were not baptized, and the stain of Original Sin was not removed and babies cannot desire their own baptism, they cannot experience Heaven. Yet, because of their innocence and lack of committed sin, they experience Limbo where a natural happiness can be experienced, but not the euphoria of the Beatific Vision.
In Pope Emeritus Benedict XVI’s time as Prefect and Pope, he let it be known that his personal opinion is that the “theory” of Limbo needs to be thrown out due to “recent understandings of God’s Love and Salvation”. Yet, the need for a concept like Limbo is still there, otherwise you throw out the idea of Original Sin. I read the letter issued by the Theological Commission at the Vatican that Pope Benedict endorsed. Yet, the letter doesn’t throw out Limbo, it just tries to find a way to say that one can hope children are saved if they die without Baptism, yet Limbo remains a valid theory. It also says that Catholics MUST baptize their children as soon as possible (in a sort of way I interpret as either a “just in case” policy or “we may be wrong and Limbo may exist”?). So even the Theological Commission’s letter doesn’t really settle the matter.
I have tried to find any essays or books on this subject in today’s Church thinking, yet not much is out there. Ralph Martin covers it slightly in “Will Many Be Saved?”. Does anybody have any thoughts or recommendations for me to look? This is something I am really fascinated by and would like to read up a lot more on it.